Colbert Restaurant, Sloane Square

There’s no stopping Chris Corbin and Jeremy King at the moment. With two of London’s hottest openings of recent times opening within the last year (The Delaunay in Aldwych and Brasserie Zedel in Soho) they are back again with Colbert Resturant on Sloane square.

Colbert Restaurant

Inspired by the great French pavement cafés, Colbert Restaurant is an informal, neighbourhood restaurant at the heart of Sloane Square. Colbert opens early for breakfast and continues to serve food and drinks throughout the day until post-theatre.

The menu at Colbert Restaurant includes a large selection of Eggs (sur plat, brouillés, omelettes, Eggs Royale/Benedict and Florentine) and Croques (including Monsieur, Madame, and also Grand Monsieur, Croque New York, Croque Raclette and Croque Provençale).

The menu is full of other Parisian café stalwarts executed very well, such as Salade de Magret Fumé, Bayonne Ham with Celeriac Rémoulade, Steak Diane, Moules Marinière, and Cassoulet de Canard.

Colbert Restaurant

Colbert restaurant has seating for 118 with an additional 22 on the terrace and the interiors were designed by Shayne Brady of David Collins Studio.

Colbert Restaurant follows its sister restaurants in being wonderfully atmospheric with the buzz of regular, happy diners. To make a booking at Colbert restaurant please Call 020 7730 2804 or email reservations@colbertchelsea.com.

Address: Colbert Restaurant, 50-52 Sloane Square London SW1W 8AX

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Brasserie Zedel, Soho

Following the success of The Delaunay, Chris Corbin and Jeremy King launched Brasserie Zedel in Soho towards the end of June 2012. Brasserie Zedel is a large, bustling Parisian brasserie transported to the heart of London, which is open throughout the day, offering great value with remarkably low prices.

Brasserie Zedel

The restaurant has been designed by David Collins Studio in the Art Deco tradition, which is a vast, stunning dining room, discreetly hidden on the lower ground floor in the heart of the West End.

Brasserie Zedel has over 200 covers, half of which are reserved for walk-ins so don’t be disappointed if the restaurant appears to be fully booked. Brasserie Zédel serves classic brasserie fare at affordable prices with starters from £2.95, main courses from £7.50 and desserts from £3.00.

On our various visits, we have made our way through most of the menu – we would recommend the Salade frisée aux lardons or the Pissaladière for the entrées, and the Onglet grillé or one of the Choucroute selection for main course.

The full à la carte menu features dishes such as Terrine de Campagne, Salade Périgourdine, Œufs Mayonnaise, Choucroute de la Mer, Bœuf en Daube, Ile Flottante, Baba au Rhum avec Crème Chantilly. There is also a daily changing plats du jour and Menus Prix Fixe.

Brasserie Zedel also features a ‘Bar Américain’ and ‘The Crazy Coqs’, a live music and cabaret venue.

Reservations: Call 020 7734 4888, book online or email

Address: 20 Sherwood Street, off Piccadilly Circus, London W1F 7ED

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London Restaurant Guide: New Restaurant Update

By Emyr Thomas

Nobody does a power restaurant to ‘see and be seen in’ quite like Caprice Holdings or Chris Corbin & Jeremy King, and both launched new restaurants at the end of 2011 that will no doubt become firm favourites throughout 2012.

34′, located just off Grosvenor Square in Mayfair was Caprice’s first new restaurant launch, which adds to its portfolio of power restaurants including The Ivy, J Sheekey’s and Scott’s. 34 specialises in meats and seasonal game but also offers lighter dishes, fish and shellfish, all to the glorious sounds of a live jazz quartet in timelessly elegant surroundings.

34 restaurant

The Delaunay, new sister restaurant to The Wolseley from Corbin & King, has opened on the corner of Drury Lane and Aldwych and already has the familiarity of an institution on the London scene. The restaurant is open seven days a week serving breakfast, afternoon tea, and à la carte lunch and dinner menus inspired by the grand cafés of Europe.

With every celebrity, socialite and restaurant connoisseur already firmly ensconced, be prepared to sell your prized possession – kidney, trust fund or mother in law – to secure that reservation.

The best affirmation that a restaurant is doing something right is if a guest books a return visit. Within minutes of leaving dinner at Alyn Williams at the Westbury (which opened quietly at the end of 2011 from Alyn Williams, who was previously head chef at the two Michelin starred Marcus Wareing at The Berkeley), my client had emailed with three further booking requests for the coming months – a sure sign that this restaurant is on to a winner.

Another former Michelin darling to set up on his own is Ollie Dabbous, formerly of Texture, with his new restaurant ‘Dabbous’, which opened on Whitfield Street in Fitzrovia at the end of January, in partnership with mixologist Oskar Kinberg, formerly bar manager at the Cuckoo Club.

Spread over two levels, the restaurant and bar has an industrial feel with exposed brickwork, sheet metal and copper pipes.

Dabbous bar

While the restaurant features a modern European menu of ‘clean flavours and seasonal ingredients’, the basement bar offers a menu of classic drinks and signature cocktails that is ideal for a group of friends or a first date.

Thompson Hotels’ first hotel outside of North America will open in Belgravia in early February with 85 rooms and an 80-seat restaurant from celebrated chef Mark Hix. Hix Belgravia will feature another outpost of Mark’s Bar, his popular bar from his Soho restaurant, as well as a cigar garden. Although the menu will still be British focused, it will have more of an international feel, based on the chef’s travels across the globe.

Hix Belgraves

While the onslaught of Mexican burrito bars might still not have ended, this year it will be time for Peruvian cuisine to take the limelight. ‘Ceviche’ promises to be London’s first Peruvian restaurant in Soho, hotly followed by LIMA in Fitzrovia, both of which will also feature a Pisco bar. Grab a Pisco sour and meet me at the ceviche counter.

Refurbishment and reinvention seem to be popular themes for the start of the year from some of the city’s celebrated chefs.

Tom Aikens has recently reopened his eponymous Chelsea restaurant after a large refurbishment to create a more relaxed atmosphere. There is an à la carte menu and a series of tasting menus, including six, eight and ten course options that are also available with matching wines.

The 52-seat restaurant features broad-boarded oak floors, custom-designed hand-made wooden chairs, a variety of mismatched oak tables (no tablecloths), and has ‘evocative quotes about food and wine’ written on the walls.

Tom Aikens Restaurant

Over in Soho, Quo Vadis has undergone (another) refurbishment, this time to mark the occasion of a new partnership with Jeremy Lee who had previously spent 16 years at the Blueprint Café.

There’s a lot to digest as we look forward to another sterling year for the London restaurant scene, but if you’re interested in a one-off charity event with some of the biggest names in cooking, check-out the ‘Who’s Cooking Dinner’ charity event on 5 March at the Four Seasons Park Lane.

20 top chefs will prepare dinner for 200 guests, who can also bid for the chefs to cook dinner in their home at a later date, all in aid of Leuka. Each chef will create a four-course menu for one table of ten people with accompanying wines. Here’s the twist: only after a draw during the pre-dinner reception do guests discover which chef is cooking for them.

The restaurants taking part include some of London’s most sought-after tables, such as Scott’s, Dinner by Heston, Zuma and Restaurant Gordon Ramsay – so perhaps no need to sell your kidney after all.

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London’s Best New Restaurants of 2011

2011 has been a great year for London food enthusiasts with an extraordinary number of new restaurants, a large proportion of which have been of an excellent quality. Here’s Bon Vivant’s guide to best new openings of the past 12 months.

Dinner By Heston

2011 started with a bang in January with Heston Blumenthal’s first foray into the London restaurant scene at the Mandarin Oriental with Dinner by Heston. ‘Dinner’, one of the most anticipated restaurant openings of recent years, received immediate acclaim by critics, collecting its first Michelin Star in the 2012 UK Michelin Guide later in the year. The signature ‘Meat Fruit’ is worth a visit alone.

Hedone

Quiet Chiswick High Road is not renowned as a cultural hotspot, but perhaps that’s why Mikael Jonsson chose it as the location for Hedone, his first restaurant project. The Swedish ex-lawyer turned Chef is not afraid to challenge people’s assumptions and since opening in July 2011, Hedone has not only challenged, but surpassed expectations.

Critics and Chefs alike have flocked to try some of the most unusual and triumphant dishes on the London restaurant scene, and with a three-week waiting list for tables, one to book ahead.

Riding House Café

The team behind the acclaimed Garrison and Village East in Bermondsey opened the Riding House Café, an all day Brasserie offering a selection of small plates to share as well as traditional main courses in Fitzrovia. The restaurant has a great vibe and a ‘buzzy’ bar area too.

Spuntino

Spuntino was one of three new ventures in 2011 from the team behind Polpo and Polpetto, the successful Venetian ‘bacaros’ in Soho. Spuntino also features sharing plates, but inspired by New York instead of Italy, with its various sliders and Mac’n’Cheese being stand-out dishes.  Like its sister restaurants, Spuntino has a no reservation policy, so expect to queue as this place is still very popular.

Pollen Street Social

Jason Atherton, formerly of Gordon Ramsay’s Maze, opened Pollen Street Social in Mayfair, and it has quickly risen to become one of London’s most popular restaurants, also collecting its first Michelin star towards the end of the year. The restaurant is a modern, relaxed take on a ‘fine dining’ restaurant.

Massimo’s

Massimo Restaurant & Oyster Bar is a Mediterranean restaurant specialising in seafood, in The Corinthia Hotel, located between Trafalgar Square and Embankment. The head chef, Massimo Riccioli, comes from the celebrated La Rosetta in Rome.

The main dining room, designed by David Collins, is truly stunning. The restaurant also features an oyster and crustacean bar and The Chef’s Table caters for up to 18 diners with its own dedicated kitchen where Massimo Riccioli cooks for guests.

Hawksmoor Guildhall

The team behind Hawksmoor opened their third steak restaurant and cocktail bar, Hawksmoor Guildhall, in the City in October. With impeccably cooked steaks and a cool cocktail bar, this is already a huge hit in the City.

CUT at 45 Park lane

Continuing with London’s interest in steak restaurants, ‘Cut’ opened in the new 45 Park Lane hotel, the latest hotel from The Dorchester Collection.

Cut’ is a restaurant by Wolfgang Puck, the celebrated US chef, who opened the original ‘Cut’ at the Beverly Wilshire hotel in Beverly Hills in 2006. The London outpost serves excellent steaks in a suitably glamorous dining room.

Opera Tavern

London has seen the addition of some great Spanish restaurants, starting the year with the Opera Tavern, a ‘restaurant and tapas bar’ in Covent Garden from the team behind Salt Yard and Dehesa.

Located in a renovated pub, the restaurant retains some of the building’s original features, and the exposed bricks and low lighting create a relaxed, intimate feel.

The Delaunay

The Delaunay, sister restaurant to The Wolseley from restaurateurs Chris Corbin and Jeremy King, has recently opened on the corner of Drury Lane and Aldwych. The restaurant is open seven days a week – until midnight from Monday to Saturday and 11pm on Sunday – serving breakfast, afternoon tea, and à la carte lunch and dinner menus ‘inspired by the grand cafés of Europe’.

34 Restaurant

Caprice Holdings has launched ’34’, a restaurant located just off Grosvenor Square in Mayfair. 34 is the group’s first restaurant launch and will add to its portfolio, which includes The Ivy, J Sheekey’s and Scott’s, one of Bon Vivant’s London favourites. The restaurant specialises in meats and seasonal game but also offers ‘lighter dishes, fish and shellfish’.

If you liked this top 10 feature, why not read our guide to the best brunch in London, the most romantic restaurants in London or the best alfresco restaurants in London?

To make sure you’re kept informed of similar updates on a regular basis from London’s premier concierge service, subscribe to the blog, our fortnightly newsletter, follow us on Twitter or like us on Facebook!

What has been your favourite restaurant of 2011? Which new restaurants are you excited to see in 2012? We would love to hear your thoughts below.

The Delaunay Restaurant

The Delaunay, sister restaurant to The Wolseley from restaurateurs Chris Corbin and Jeremy King, opened on the corner of Drury Lane and Aldwych at the end of 2011.

The Delaunay restaurant is open seven days a week – until midnight from Monday to Saturday and 11pm on Sunday – serving breakfast, afternoon tea, and à la carte lunch and dinner menus ‘inspired by the grand cafés of Europe’.

The Delaunay Restaurant

The Delaunay is one of London’s most popular restaurants and is always buzzing with a chic, glamorous crowd. Our favourite menu items are the schnitzels and the Fillet of Beef ‘Stroganoff’.

The Counter at The Delaunay, which has its own separate entrance on Aldwych, offers relaxed, casual dining throughout the day, as well as a take-out option.

The Delaunay Restaurant

The Delaunay’s two private dining rooms seat up to 8 and 14 guests respectively and are available to book for breakfast, lunch and dinner.  The two rooms can also be opened up to accommodate a long table of 24 guests.

Whilst booking is always recommended, a certain number of tables are available for ‘walk-ins’ on the day. They opened another sister restaurant Brasserie Zedel a few months later in Soho, which has also been a huge hit.

For further information and access to the best tables at The Delaunay, contact your concierge at Bon Vivant.

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